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500 Guadalajara Open WTA

Iva Jovic captures first WTA title in Guadalajara and climbs to world No 36

Iva Jovic wins her first WTA title in Guadalajara, rises to world No 36 and breaks $1m in earnings.

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Seventeen-year-old Iva Jovic completed a breakthrough week in Guadalajara by winning her first WTA Tour singles title at the WTA 500 event. Jovic reached her first top-level final after defeating fellow teenager Nikola Bartunkova in the semi-final and then overcame Colombian Emiliana Arango in the final to claim the Guadalajara Open crown.

The victory made Jovic the youngest player to win a WTA title this year, edging Mirra Andreeva by 16 days, and the youngest American to lift a trophy since a 15-year-old Coco Gauff won the Linz Open in 2004. After the final Jovic paid tribute to her opponent, saying: “You showed so much fight and gave the people a show. It’s not easy to start out on tour when you’re young … but people like Emiliana make it easier and always have a smile on their face.”

Jovic entered Guadalajara ranked No 73 and gained a career-high jump of 37 places to No 36. Her run included a second-round victory over eighth seed Camila Osorio and a quarter-final in which she saved a match point against Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva. The champion added 499 points to reach a total of 1,413.

Arango began the tournament at No 85, ten places below her previous best of No 76. The Colombian collected 323 points to move to No 53 and become her country’s new No 1. Her route to the final featured an opening upset of fifth seed Magda Linette and a semi-final win over Elsa Jacquemot to reach her first career final.

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Jovic is now the seventh-highest American in the rankings and the youngest player inside the top 100. The winner’s cheque for Jovic was $164,000, pushing her career prize money past $1 million to $1,028,278, with $826,978 earned in 2025. Arango earned $101,000 as runner-up, taking her 2025 total to $679,355 and her career earnings to $1,249,670.

500 ATP Swiss Indoors Basel

Joao Fonseca wins Swiss Indoors Basel for first ATP 500 title at 19

Joao Fonseca, 19, beat Alejandro Davidovich Fokina to win his first ATP 500 title in Basel. to No.28

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Joao Fonseca completed a breakthrough week at the Swiss Indoors Basel, defeating Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-3, 6-4 to claim the first ATP 500 title of his career. The 19-year-old produced a composed performance in the final and secured the biggest trophy he has lifted to date.

The victory carries wider significance for Brazilian men’s tennis. It is the largest title won by a Brazilian man since Gustavo Kuerten captured the Masters 1000 event in Cincinnati in 2001. That milestone came just over five years before Fonseca was born.

Fonseca’s result in Basel will also have an immediate impact on his ATP position. He is projected to climb from No. 46 to No. 28 when the updated rankings are released on Monday. That jump shatters his previous career high of No. 42 and will mark his simultaneous debuts inside the Top 40 and Top 30.

At the ATP 500 level, titles carry both ranking reward and momentum. For Fonseca this win represents a clear step forward on the tour and a defining moment early in his professional career. The straight-sets scoreline in the final underlines the efficiency of his run through the tournament.

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Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, the beaten finalist, was unable to overturn Fonseca’s advantage on the big points in the key games. Fonseca’s Basel success will be measured not only by the trophy but by the ranking move and the historical context: the most significant victory by a Brazilian man on the ATP tour in more than two decades.

The Swiss Indoors Basel title is now the standout achievement on Fonseca’s resume and a milestone that reshapes expectations for the 19-year-old in the weeks ahead.

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500 ATP Vienna

Sinner notches 50th Top 10 win, advances to Vienna final with straight-sets victory

Sinner reached the Vienna final, notched his 50th Top 10 win and extended his indoor streak. (20-0).

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Jannik Sinner advanced to the Vienna final with a straight-sets victory over No. 7 Alex de Minaur, prevailing 6-3, 6-4 in the ATP 500 semifinals on Saturday. The 24-year-old Italian added several milestones to an already remarkable season.

The win qualified Sinner for his eighth final of the year. Having reached eight finals last year as well, he became the first man to record eight or more finals in consecutive seasons since Novak Djokovic did so in 2015 and 2016. The result also extended Sinner’s dominance on indoor hard courts; it was his 20th consecutive indoor hard-court victory, a run that places him among an elite group in the Open Era alongside John McEnroe, Ivan Lendl, Stefan Edberg, Pete Sampras, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and most recently Andy Murray between 2016 and 2019.

Saturday brought Sinner an even larger achievement. His win over de Minaur marked the 50th Top 10 victory of his career. Born in 2001, Sinner is the first man born in the 2000s, and the first born in 1998 or later, to reach 50 Top 10 wins. The match underlined his consistency against the upper echelon of the sport: Sinner has now won his last 20 matches in a row against Top 10 opponents other than Carlos Alcaraz, a streak that dates back to last summer. He is also a perfect 12-0 against de Minaur regardless of ranking.

Sinner will attempt to add to his Top 10 total in the final, aiming for his 51st such victory the day after recording this milestone. The Vienna result consolidates a season in which he has regularly reached the latter stages of big events and continued to build significant career landmarks.

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500 ATP Vienna

Bublik’s Postmatch Banter Again Steals the Show After Vienna Loss

Bublik lost 6-4, 6-4 to Jannik Sinner in Vienna and, as usual, turned the net into his stage. again.

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Alexander Bublik lost a tight quarterfinal at the Erste Bank Open, falling 6-4, 6-4 to top seed Jannik Sinner. As has become routine, Bublik used the net as a stage after the match, attempting to turn a customary handshake into a moment of levity. Fans will often say, “I’m just here for the handshake,” and on Friday Bublik nearly lived up to that expectation.

Bublik quickly sought to exchange his racquet for an imagined microphone, leaving Sinner smiling and the umpire chuckling at what the draft called the Kazah’s presumed zingers. Without amplification, those remarks were heard only by Sinner and those close at court.

The Vienna exchange fit a pattern that dates to their second meeting at the 2021 Miami Open, when a 19-year-old Sinner was on the way to his first Masters 1000 final and Bublik offered unabashed praise. At that handshake Bublik said, “You’re not human,” and, “You’re 15 years old and you play like this? Good job!”

Bublik’s compliments have continued as their rivalry developed. After their 2025 US Open fourth-round clash he declared Sinner was “like an AI-generated player.” The comment plays off Bublik’s lighthearted framing of Sinner’s precision and consistency.

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On court, the rivalry is still defined by Sinner’s advantage; Sinner leads their head-to-head 6-2. Off court, Bublik’s postmatch ritual remains intact. He has also twice claimed to have solved the so-called AI puzzle, including a win earlier this year at the Terra Wortmann Open in Halle. Despite the scoreboard, the No. 16-ranked Bublik remains undefeated at the net in terms of showmanship, continuing to make the handshake a memorable part of their meetings.

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